This book examines the significance of cabins and other temporary
seasonal dwellings as important symbols in modern Norwegian cultural
and literary history. The author uses Michel Foucault’s notion of
the “heterotopia”—an actual place that also functions
imaginatively as a kind of real-world utopia—to examine how cabins
have signified differently during successive periods, from an
Enlightenment trope of simplicity and moderation, through the rise of
tourism, into a period of increasing individualism and alienation from
nature. For each period discussed, the author relates a widely
recognized real world cabin to a cluster of thematically related
literary texts from a wide variety of genres. Cabins in Modern
Norwegian Literature considers both central canonical works, such as
Camilla Collett’s The District Governor’s Daughters, Bjørnstjerne
Bjørnson’s Synnøve Solbakken, Henrik Ibsen’s When We Dead
Awaken, and Knut Hamsun’s The Growth of the Soil, as well as less
widely known literary works and texts from marginal genres such as
hunting narratives and crime fiction. In addition, the book contains
analyses of a few key films from the contemporary period that also
activate the cabin as a motif. The central argument is that while
Norwegians today tend to think of cabin culture as essentially
unchanging over a long span of time, it has in fact changed
dramatically over the past two hundred years, and that it is an
extremely rich and complex cultural phenomenon deeply imbedded in the
construction of national identity.
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Negotiating Place and Identity
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781611476491
Publisert
2015
Utgiver
Vendor
Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter